Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hungary Handed Over Azeri Killer Aware Of Backlash Risks -PM

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Hungary Handed Over Azeri Killer Aware Of Backlash Risks -PM

    HUNGARY HANDED OVER AZERI KILLER AWARE OF BACKLASH RISKS -PM

    Chicago Tribune
    Sept 11 2012
    IL

    BUDAPEST, Sept 11 (Reuters) - Hungary knew its decision to hand
    convicted killer Ramil Safarov over to his native Azerbaijan would
    spark a diplomatic backlash from Armenia, Hungarian Prime Minister
    Viktor Orban said on Tuesday.

    Budapest released Safarov, a soldier, to Azerbaijan last month where
    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev pardoned him on arrival. Safarov had
    served eight years of a life sentence for killing an Armenian officer
    during a NATO-sponsored training session in Hungary in 2004.

    Armenia immediately broke diplomatic ties with Hungary and said that
    releasing Safarov, who was given a hero's welcome on his return,
    was a "grave mistake".

    Orban was asked at a news conference about a report by news portal
    origo.hu, which said the prime minister had taken the decision despite
    being warned about the risks of such a move.

    "There was coordination within the entire government about this,"
    Orban said. "Each ministry presented its opinion, the justice ministry
    about the legal side and the foreign ministry about the diplomatic
    consequences."

    Orban said he had then announced the decision personally in line with
    general procedure.

    "The foreign ministry had forecast precisely what types of consequences
    this or the other decision may have. Nothing happened after our
    decision that we would not have reckoned with in advance," he added.

    Hungary has said its actions were consistent with international law
    and that Azerbaijan had promised to uphold Safarov's sentence.

    While the two countries were in talks about developing closer economic
    ties, these were in no way linked to the release of the soldier,
    the Hungarian government has said.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have been at odds since a war between ethnic
    Azeris and Armenians that erupted in 1991 over the mainly Armenian
    Nagorno-Karabakh enclave. A ceasefire was signed in 1994 but new
    cross-border clashes this year have raised fears of a resumption
    of fighting.

    (Reporting by Gergely Szakacs; Editing by Andrew Osborn)

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/sns-rt-hungary-azerbaijanl5e8kbic5-20120911,0,3824180,full.story

Working...
X